Description
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Visual Dispersion (Mechanical): The design exhibits “Xerographic Grit-Mottling Dispersion.” Within the obsidian leaf, the pigments are dispersed in a high-contrast, stippled pattern characteristic of Sandblasting or Coarse Halftone Printing. This provides a tactile “sandpaper” surface quality where the background white and the gray mid-tones “vibrate” through the black ink, mimicking the natural weathering of stone or industrial oxidation.
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Pigment Dispersion (Zonal): The design features “Planar Refractive Graduation.” Dispersion is strictly compartmentalized. The background shapes maintain a smooth, uniform dispersion, while the focal leaves utilize a “fractured” dispersion. This contrast mimics the way light interacts with different materials—absorbing into the matte “blobs” while scattering across the textured surfaces of the “specimens.”
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Edge Dispersion (Sharp-to-Grit): The boundaries of the forms feature a “Defined Transition.” Most elements maintain a crisp, high-contrast dispersion against the white ground. However, the textured leaf edges exhibit a “frayed” dispersion where the individual grit nodes meet the solid color, ensuring the design feels physically integrated rather than flatly applied.













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